Financial Markets. ETF Market
Exchange-Traded Funds Market
Definition
The ETF market is a segment of the financial system where Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) are traded, tracking a specific index, sector, asset class, or strategy. An ETF combines the characteristics of an investment fund and a stock: it holds a portfolio of assets but trades on an exchange throughout the trading session like a regular stock.
An ETF does not create a new asset class – it is a wrapper for accessing existing markets.
History and Evolution
The first ETFs emerged in the 1990s as a tool for tracking broad indices. The most famous example is SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF), which replicates the S&P 500 index. Over time, ETFs expanded to include sector-specific, commodity, bond, international, and even strategic funds (e.g., factor-based or inverse ETFs).
Today, ETFs have become a key instrument for passive investing.
How an ETF Works
An ETF holds a portfolio of assets (stocks, bonds, futures, or other instruments). Its structure is maintained through a creation/redemption mechanism.
In the creation process, an authorized participant (a large financial institution) delivers a basket of underlying assets to the fund in exchange for new ETF shares. In the redemption process, ETF shares are returned to the fund in exchange for the underlying assets.
This mechanism helps keep the ETF's price close to its net asset value (NAV).
Market Structure
ETFs trade on centralized exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ, LSE). ETF liquidity consists of two levels:
– Exchange liquidity (trading volume)
– Underlying asset liquidity
Even if exchange volume is low, an ETF can remain liquid if its underlying assets are actively traded.
Main ETF Categories
Index ETFs — SPY (S&P 500), QQQ (Nasdaq 100)
Bond ETFs — TLT (US Treasuries), LQD (Corporate Bonds)
Commodity ETFs — GLD (Gold), USO (Oil exposure)
International ETFs — EEM (Emerging Markets)
Sector ETFs — XLF (Financials), XLK (Technology)
Inverse and Leveraged ETFs — designed for short-term strategies
Role in the Financial System
ETFs have become a primary channel for capital flows. Investors no longer pick individual stocks; they buy "the entire market." This increases correlations between assets and makes flows more systemic.
Passive investments through ETFs can amplify trends. If large flows enter an S&P 500 ETF, the fund automatically buys all companies in the index proportionally.
ETF vs. Stocks
A stock is a share of a specific company.
An ETF is a diversified portfolio of assets.
An ETF reduces individual company risk but remains exposed to systemic risk.
ETF vs. Mutual Funds
ETFs trade throughout the day.
Mutual funds are priced once a day (NAV).
ETFs typically have lower fees and greater flexibility.
Trading Hours
ETFs trade within the exchange session of their respective markets. Liquidity is highest during the main trading segment.
Advantages
Diversification
Low costs
Transparency
Liquidity
Flexibility
Risks
Systemic correlation
Liquidity of underlying assets during crises
Inverse and leveraged ETFs can have complex dynamics due to daily rebalancing
Macroeconomic Impact
ETFs have changed market structure. Passive flows can affect company valuations independently of fundamental indicators. Large inflows or outflows from ETFs can create significant movements in underlying assets.
Conclusion
The ETF market is an infrastructural layer of the modern financial world. It provides access to any asset class through a simple exchange-traded instrument. ETFs have become a key mechanism for passive investing and capital reallocation, changing the way the stock market and global financial flows function.